Earlier this month, we offered Narcan training at
the plant for our supervisors and site managers. I deemed this to be necessary
not because of the people I work with, but rather because of the world we live
in. Working with 200 people and having our facilities visited by and shared
with dozens more on a daily basis, the odds are that sooner or later we will
encounter some opiate-related situation.
That’s because the opiod epidemic has become a regular
part of Western New York life; it has permeated every demographic in the region
– young and old; rich and poor; black and white; urban and rural. The
statistics show that every one of us knows someone who is addicted to some sort
of opiod whether it’s heroin or prescription pain pills like
morphine, codeine, oxycodone, methadone and Vicodin.
I firmly believe that puts every business or
non-profit that employs or serves more than a few dozen people a day in the
crosshairs. Factories, restaurants, retailers and schools should be prepared
for the day that someone comes into their facility either strung-out or
spiraling into an overdose. It’s the latter situation where Narcan training
comes into play.
Narcan is the name brand of naloxone, which is an
opiate antidote. The active ingredient competes with opioids to bind with the
same receptors in the brain that feast on the drugs. Usually, it reverses the
effects of an opioid overdose in 2 to 3 minutes, buying the poisoned person
time for emergency medical help to arrive.
Without it, a person who is
overdosing on an opioid can have his or her breathing slow down or stop
completely, causing brain damage or death. With heroin and the like,
overdosing’s effects aren’t immediate – they typically develop over a 1 to 3
hour period; meaning that someone can come to work or shop at a store in a
relatively normal-appearing state then devolve into total misery.
Narcan is easy to administer. The
layman lacking even the most basic knowledge of first aid skills can use it. It
is done with a misting agent that is sprayed into the affected party’s nose. No
needles. No mess. And, if you were wrong about the diagnosis, there are no ill
effects to that person. You can’t get any easier or safer than that.
Some county governments like Erie
offer training and kits free of charge to interested individuals. Here in
Niagara County, we haven’t reached that level of community-based drug triage,
but I guarantee we will.
In the meantime, if you would like
to prepare yourself for something that might happen anywhere and at anytime,
you can do as we did. We called on the services of the Batavia-based Lake
Plains Community Care. Their emergency medical services trainer Andrew Steel
gave an excellent seminar and conducted hands-on training. Each of the trainees
was outfitted with his own Narcan kit. All of that was fully funded by a state
grant that Lake Plains uses to train the community.
Being prepared for a heroin overdose
that could happen at your doorstep might seem unnecessary. “It will never
happen here,” you might say. But realize that too many mothers and fathers and
husbands and wives never thought that a heroin addiction would strike and tear
apart their family. It can happen to anyone, anywhere. The heroin and pain
killer crises are real, and you should be prepared for the very worst. The life
you save might be your customer, a coworker, a friend, or a member of your own
family.
From the 27 June 2016 Greater Niagara Newspapers
1 comment:
It's sad that we now need training to deal with this fringe of society, but I am impressed that the training and treatment is available.
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